Named Entity Results, Thomas Browne

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, and devoted chiefly to early English literature.
Some are from Sir John Beaumont's Elegy on the Lady Marquesse of Winchester, printed in Chalmers's English Poets; Massinger's Fatal Dowry; Marston's Antonio and Mellida, and What You Will; Sir Thomas Browne's Vulgar and Common Errors; Butler's Reminiscences; Southey's Book of the Church; Scott's Stories taken from Scottish History, and his Life of Swift; and Bulwer's Paul Clifford.
He enjoyed at this time the old English writers, particularlymed to send books to its library.
Some of his class, in their Senior year, formed a private society for mutual improvement, keeping even its existence a secret, and calling it The Nine, from their number.
They were Hopkinson, Stearns, Sumner, Browne, Warren, Worcester, Appleton, Carter, and McBurney.
They met in each other's rooms, read essays, and each in turn made up a record, generally of an amusing kind, to be read at the next meeting.
On Nov. 2, 1829, Sumner read, in 22 Holworthy,